The Gripping Hand (47 page)

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Authors: Larry Niven,Jerry Pournelle

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Speculative Fiction

BOOK: The Gripping Hand
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They'd turned
Cerberus
's original airlock into a toilet: one toilet with a variety of attachments. The Engineers had worked on
Cerberus
's original toilet, too. It worked better now.

 

 

"They've put screens up. Both toilets," Glenda Ruth said. "We're
talking
now."

 

 

"Can you tell them to leave us some room?"

 

 

"I'll give it another try, but you can guess the answer. This much is more personal room than they've ever seen in one spot."

 

 

An Engineer arrived with food. All of the Moties converged except one Warrior. Glenda Ruth said, "Jennifer, go and see what they're eating."

 

 

The meal was democratic: the young Master called Merlin supervised distribution and sent a Watchmaker with food for the Warrior on guard. Merlin looked around when Jennifer came near. Victoria said he was a young male; this was not obvious, given he was helping to nurse the Mediator pups. The human presence didn't disturb him. Jennifer looked about her; spoke a few words to Victoria.

 

 

The Mediator swam to join Glenda Ruth. Victoria had been learning Anglic much faster than Glenda Ruth could learn Oort Cloud Recent.

 

 

She said, "About food? I think,
thought
you have your own."

 

 

"I'd like to know if this is like what we eat," she told it.

 

 

"Will ask Doctor and Engineer."

 

 

"I would like to feed you cocoa."

 

 

"Why?"

 

 

"On the planet they liked cocoa. If you like cocoa, we have something to trade."

 

 

"You said, what is in safebox is trade goods. We should not take without giving. Cocoa in safe?"

 

 

"Yes."

 

 

Victoria brought her flat face close. "Trade space with us! Past the starhole is all the worlds, all within your gripping hand. Give us the worlds, take what you want. Take tools you see, tell tools you want, Engineers make that. Take any caste of us, tell what shape and kind you want, you wait, your children will have."

 

 

Glenda Ruth said, "This is not so simple. We know how your numbers grow."

 

 

Stillness.

 

 

"We think we have an answer, but it's still not easy. Many Motie families will need to work together. As Moties do not always do."

 

 

"Glenda Ruth, who is Crazy Eddie you speak of?"

 

 

Glenda Ruth was only surprised for a moment. "Planet-dwelling Moties told us about Crazy Eddie. Maybe you know him with another name."

 

 

"Maybe."

 

 

"Crazy Eddie isn't one person, he is a kind of person. The kind who . . . who tries to stop change when change is too massive to stop."

 

 

"We tell children about Sfufth, who throws away garbage because it smells bad."

 

 

"Something like that." Sfufth? Shifufsth? She couldn't quite make that sound.

 

 

Jennifer had rejoined them, and now she carried the older pup. She said, "We had a very powerful Master, long ago. Joseph Stalin had the power of life and death over all of his people, in hundreds of millions." Jennifer glanced at Glenda Ruth: stop or go? Uncertain, Glenda Ruth nodded.

 

 

Jennifer went on, "Advisers told Stalin that there was a shortage of copper tube in his domain. Stalin gave his orders. Everywhere across a tenth of the land area of our world, what was made of copper was melted down to make tubes. Communication lines disappeared. Tractor parts, other tools. Wherever copper was needed, it was made pipes instead."

 

 

"Sfufth. We know him," Victoria said. "Sfufth is found everywhere, in every caste. Sfufth breeds Watchmakers for sale to other nests. No need for cage, they take care of selves."

 

 

Jennifer was delighted. "Yes! There's a painting in a museum on Mote Prime." She was about to convey an unfortunate nuance, and Glenda Ruth couldn't stop her. "A burning city. Starving Mo-ties in riot. A Mediator stands on a car to be seen and heard and shouts, 'Return to your tasks!" "

 

 

Victoria nodded head and shoulders. "When possibilities close, Crazy Eddie doesn't see."

 

 

Glenda Ruth said, "In Stalin's domain, fifty years after. Things changed. More communication, better tools and transport. Their Warriors ate half their resources for all that long time, but the weapons they made were second best. Lesser domains began splitting off. Some older Masters acted to take charge of the domain and turn it all back. The Gang of Crazy Eddies."

 

 

Had she got her point across? Years of watching Jock and Charlie weren't helping enough. Too much of Mediator body language was conscious; was arbitrary. She said, "When possibilities open, Crazy Eddie doesn't see."

 

 

The Mediator thought that over. She said. "Make cocoa to look at first. For safety."

 

 

For poison
, she meant.

 

 

So Freddy made cocoa for the four of them—"Make it hot," Glenda Ruth whispered—and an extra bulbful for analysis.

 

 

"Too hot," Victoria said when she touched it. She gave it to the Engineer, who carried it into the hidden part of
Cerberus
. The human crew huddled with their heads together, sipping, their shoulders shutting out the aliens around them. Freddy had a crime drama running on a monitor; Victoria might have been watching it, and Merlin watched intermittently, but no human was.

 

 

"How are you doing?" Freddy asked.

 

 

Glenda Ruth said, "I'm dancing as fast as I can, but the pace is too damned slow. Jennifer, what were they eating?"

 

 

Jennifer was running her hand along the pup's back as if it were a cat; but her hand kept stopping to feel the weird geometry. She said, "Just one dish. A gray crust around gray-green paste that looked a lot like basic protocarb."

 

 

"Jen, did it steam? Was it hot?"

 

 

"It wasn't hot. What do you want to know?"

 

 

She dared not tell them too much, but she had to know this. "Do they cook?"

 

 

"Glenda Ruth, the air coming through the new lock is warmer than it is here, but there's no smell of cooking."

 

 

"Okay." She looked at the faces around her. Open, honest faces shadowed by every passing thought. Did they understand, would they reveal, too much?

 

 

Engineer and Warrior were certainly infected. The worm eggs might well infect every Motie form in
Cerberus
's cabin. If that didn't reach a Master, then an Engineer might have passed it on by now. But if a Mediator wasn't infected soon . . . there wouldn't be anything to talk about. Just a Master turned sterile male, and other forms showing the same symptoms, and the blame very clear.

 

 
2: Vermin City

And in that state of nature, no arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all, continual fear and danger of violent death; and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.

 

—Thomas Hobbes,
Leviathan

 

 

 

 

From the beginning Freddy Townsend had been concerned about his equipment. "I know we're prisoners," he told Victoria as soon as the Mediator would understand. "I know you can take what you want."

 

 

"Leave your stuff alone if play to win," Victoria said. "Need some stuff for now."

 

 

"Good. You think about future. You want us happy for future?"

 

 

"Say instead we want you not hating us for future."

 

 

"Good. Good. Then get them to leave my telescope the hell alone! It's this whole complex, here and here, all of this stuff—"

 

 

"Engineers make it better."

 

 

"Don't want better. Want this stuff the way it is," Freddy said distinctly. He had watched what happened to
Hecate
. He believed—and so did Glenda Ruth—that the Moties would strip the telescope of anything they wanted, leaving a tube and two lenses to be improved to their hearts' content.

 

 

They must have convinced Victoria; Victoria must have convinced one of the Masters. Days later, the scope and its computerized direction-finding and data-recording systems still matched Empire racing specs.

 

 

 

 

 

Freddy's fingers behind her ear teased Glenda Ruth awake.

 

 

The smaller pup was clinging to his back, a tiny skewed head above his left shoulder, wearing the generic smile; but Freddy looked quite solemn. Glenda Ruth followed his pointing finger to a screen and . . . what? Display of a broken kaleidoscope? Numbers indicated that she was looking aft, under one-hundred-power magnification, via Freddy's telescope.

 

 

"We're decelerating. Whole fleet. To that," Freddy said.

 

 

A shattered mirror on star-dusted black . . . mirrors, lots of mirrors, circles and ribbons and scraps and one great triangle. The mirrors weren't rotating, but some of what they illuminated was, on an eccentric axis. Sunlight off the mirrors set it to glowing like the City of God. . . .

 

 

"Schizophrenia City," Jennifer said.

 

 

Glenda Ruth winced. "Pandemonium," she said. John Milton's capital of Hell. If this was Captor Fleet's home base, they were indeed mad.

 

 

Pandemonium was backlit, showing mostly black, but she could see the lack of pattern. There were blocks and spires and tubes, considerable fine structure, very spread out. As an artistic whole . . . it wasn't whole.

 

 

Jennifer said, "Cities do grow this way, if there's no street plan. But in space? That's dangerous."

 

 

"Dangerous," her pup said emphatically. Freddy's pup peeked out of his arms and nodded wisely.

 

 

Glenda Ruth called, "Victoria?"

 

 

"Something's happening," Terry Kakumi said.

 

 

Light flashed here, there. A chunk of Pandemonium City broke free, 6 percent or 8 percent of the whole; rotated to use its section of mirror as a shield, and pulled away. Ruby light sputtered at it, belatedly.

 

 

"Civil war, maybe. Maybe a lifeboat running away from us. I don't think they see Captor Fleet as friends."

 

 

"Yeah, Terry. Maybe it's how Motie cities breed? But whose city?
Victoria
?" No answer came. Glenda Ruth said, "Likely she's asleep." Moties needed their sleep, or at least Mediators did.

 

 

Terry said, "We've been decelerating for two hours now. Matching velocities. Glenda Ruth, we have to see this—" Terry's arm flashed up to block her eyes. A ruby glare filled the cabin. An instant later all screens were black.

 

 

"Langston Field," Terry said. "Ours. Don't think that place has one. Sorry. Are you okay?"

 

 

Freddy said, "Hell, we're under attack!"

 

 

"But by what?" Jennifer asked.

 

 

"Good question."

 

 

When nothing further happened, Terry presently cut bricks of basic protocarb for their breakfast. They watched the screen, but it remained dark.

 

 

Victoria emerged from the airlock. The Mediator skimmed along one of the big vines, picking red berries, then veered to join them. She asked, "Do you take chocolate for breakfast?"

 

 

Glenda Ruth spoke before Terry Kakumi could. "Sure. Freddy? Make it lukewarm, then we can heat ours. Victoria, does your Engineer say it's safe?"

 

 

"Yes."

 

 

Terry couldn't stand it. "We're pulling near a large structure. Is it your home?"

 

 

A moment's pause, then Victoria said, "No. Chocolate?"

 

 

Freddy didn't move until Glenda Ruth opened the cocoa and pushed it into his hands. No, he couldn't read minds, but she made eye contact and thought hard:
Yes, Freddy, Victoria's trying to distract us, yes, she's hiding something, Freddy love, but we want the lizard-raping chocolate!

 

 

Freddy set to work, meticulously measuring powder, shaking it with boiled water, adding the basic protocarb product most crew called milk. He poured it into squeezers and handed one, lukewarm, to the Mediator. The others he set heating in the microwave.

 

 

Victoria sipped without waiting. Her eyes widened. "Strange. Good." She sipped again. "Good."

 

 

"This is the least of what the Empire can offer. More to the point is the meeting of unlike minds."

 

 

"And elbow space."

 

 

Terry's patience was short. "The city?"

 

 

"It's resources, Terry," Victoria said. "We will take them."

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